Hermes typ osobowości MBTI
Osobowość
"Jaki typ osobowości jest {profilename}? {profilename} jest typem osobowości {mbti} w mbti, {enneagram} - {iv} - {tritype} w enneagram, {big5} w Big 5, {sociionics} in Socionics."
Hermes é um dos maiores exemplos de intuição extrovertida e a ligação dela com o consciente coletivo, ele consegue ler os símbolos e arquétipos do consciente coletivo, ele é um clássico charlatão com uma dualidade de repressão da gula também, isso fica claro um histórias mais posteriores, ele como padroeiro dos ladrões já indica a parte hedonista libertinosa e charlatã porém posteriormente é mostrado esse lado sacrificial de amor pela família, seu julgamento primário é completamente introvertido e principalmente lógico e de senso crítico, ela pega a informação exterior e a intenaliza, a desconstruindo e reconstruindo em sua própria mente.
Biografia
Hermes (pronounced her-meez) is the god of travelers, merchants, thieves, gamblers, athletes, and elegant speakers. He also serves the gods as a messenger and an arbitrator of disputes. He appears as a handsome youth carrying a white caduceus. He wears a winged helm and sandals. Hermes is perhaps the shrewdest and most cunning of all the Olympian deities; he began his career as a thief before he was a day old by stealing a herd of cattle from his brother Apollo (who retains a distaste for thieves to this day), and hid them in a cave in the mountains. While Apollo searched for the lost cattle, Hermes fashioned the first lyre, and appeased his older brother with a trade. Later, he invented the syrinx (also called the panpipes), which Apollo traded for the golden caduceus. Fact is, it seems as if Hermes can do no wrong. Though he's a fierce warrior and a daring thief, he's also the happy-go-luckiest of the Olympians, eschewing the arrogant pride so many of the others seem to embrace. Though he has his moments of vanity, Hermes is generally far more gentle than the general run of the Olympian deities. Indeed, it's this charm that's brought nearly all of the Greek pantheon firmly to Hermes' side, and he can mend the rifts between two bickering deities more fully than Zeus. His sense of fair play is legendary among the Olympians; they appeal to him for impartial judgment, and depend on his speed for delivering messages. It's hard to find a deity who doesn't like Hermes. While he values the wit and daring required to accomplish a difficult theft, he frowns upon those who would steal from anyone who cannot afford the loss. He urges his followers to be dependable and prompt, but he despises tediousness and smiles when something unexpected upsets the predictable. Hermes abhors idleness. If one cannot do anything useful, Hermes says, the proper thing to do is travel and have new experiences. Omens from Hermes include an unusually good or bad run of luck or a sudden gust of wind as he or his avatar rushes past.